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Impact Of Covid-19 on Indian Banking Sector
1. Impact of Covid-19 on
Banking Sector
By
Kunal Agarwal -161
Ayush Bhatter - 81
2. Introduction
•COVID-19 is undoubtedly one of the biggest global
events of our lifetimes, presenting unprecedented
challenges to many industries, governments and people
all over the world. The pandemic remains a health and
humanitarian crisis, and the business and economic
impact has been deep and far reaching. Financial
services firms, in particular, have the opportunity to help
consumers and businesses weather the economic
downturn and navigate the current storm.
3. • India’s Banking Sector is disproportionately under-developed
given the size of it’s economy
• If India would play a proportionate role in it’s economy it should
have 6 banks in the global top 100 (Currently we have only 1)
• As PSBs account for 70% the market share in India Banking, the
ones of supporting Indian economy and fostering its economic
development falls on them
• Even though PSBs are dominant in the banking sector ,they lag
considerably in performance when compared to their peers.
• While greater population does Lower penetration of credit, such
penetration is disproportionately lower in India when compared
to our population
4.
5. Impact Of Covid-19 On Banking
Sector
• 1) The Indian banking sector shunned lending to small and
medium-sized businesses, while also staying away from
riskier personal loans. Total non-food credit rose 6.8% in
May compared with 11.4% last year, shows monthly bank
credit data released by the Reserve Bank of India. Credit
growth to industry fell to 1.7% compared to 6.4% a year
ago. Credit to micro and small enterprises contracted 3.4%,
while lending to medium sized enterprises fell 5.3%. “Credit
growth to ’chemicals & chemical products’ ’construction’,
’infrastructure’, ‘food processing’, ‘textiles’, and ‘all
engineering’ decelerated/contracted,” the RBI said in its
release.
6. • 2) ₹15.5 lakh crore: Covid-19’s exclusive addition to stressed
debt -Nineteen sectors, which were not under stress before the
pandemic but have been hit it, account for Rs 15.5 lakh crore of
debt. Retail and wholesale trade are the worst affected with
outstanding debt of Rs 5.4 lakh crore. The pandemic has also
affected 11 sectors which were already under stress. These
sectors have a debt of Rs 22.2 lakh crore. Non-banking financial
companies (NBFCs) have the highest , Rs 7.98 lakh crore, among
these sectors.
• Agriculture and allied products make up the biggest silver lining in
India’s debt landscape. This sector has debt of Rs 9.8 lakh crore.
It was stress-free before the pandemic and continues to be so.
•
7. 3) Bank Credit Growth Across Sectors Turns
Negative
•Incremental credit to all
industries fell 1.5%
between March and May
this year, compared with
a drop of 2.5% in the
same period of the
previous years.
8. 4) Further Decline In Credit Growth To
Major Industries
• As we see in the graph , For
companies in specific
industries, incremental bank
credit growth during the
first two months of this
fiscal fell significantly, in
some cases to the lowest
growth rate in five years
9. 5) Industry-Wise Fall In Bank Credit Growth
Downturn In Retail and Micro
Credit –
The aversion to unsecured
credit, which began as the
Covid-19 crisis disrupted jobs
and incomes, continued.
Meanwhile, reduced spending
brought down credit card
outstanding loans.
10. 6) Aversion Towards Unsecured Retail
and Micro Credit
.We can See that
growth had slowed
further across all
major categories of
retail loans.
11. Stock market
• COVID-19 has generated significant instability and high volatility in global
capital markets. The financial sector has been one of the most affected, with
bank valuations dropping in all countries around the world
• Banking stocks were impacted during COVID-19. In the period from 01
December 2019 to 30 April 2020 -- most banks saw a price slump in mid-March.
12. Some Of The Key Focus Areas
• Customer Service and Advice :As a result of social distancing, an increasing number of consumers are using online
banking channels to manage their money. This is likely to result in a more permanent shift in customer preferences to
digital channels and an increased demand for digital services. It’s important for banks to be accessible to all consumers,
including the elderly or those not familiar with digital banking, providing education on how to use digital tools, keeping
ATMs stocked and operational. As customers seek help and advice on short-term cash management and re-planning
their future, banks would need to prioritize live interactions through video collaboration tools. This increase in digital
customer engagement must go hand in hand with a ramp-up of cybersecurity and fraud-protection tools to protect
customers.
• Credit Management :Even with the Indian government’s stimulus packages and Reserve Bank of India’s (RBI) liquidity
measures, banks can expect an increase in loan defaults as borrowers across customer groups struggle to make
payments in the face of an economic crisis resulting from lost business and jobs. Besides the moratorium facility
announced by the RBI for all term loans, as part of the COVID-19 package, lenders should consider proactively
restructuring loans to reduce the cashflow burden in the near term, thus reducing defaults in the immediate future. The
industry must work together to make the financial relief process quick and easy to deploy. Banks should proactively
initiate credit forbearance and modification programs using a data-driven approach to understand which customers
need help and then rapidly reach out with tailored, relevant solutions. Even with these programs in place, some
customers may still not be able to make their next payments. So, banks should prepare for losses and build capacity to
deal with an increase in delinquent loans. As consumer demand picks up, albeit gradually, post lockdown, banks will
need to repurpose their go-to-market and customer acquisition model, keeping in mind changing consumer behavior
post COVID-19, as well as focus on digitally native journeys and re-look at underwriting norms for better risk discovery.
13. • Revenue Compression :Revenue from retail and commercial banking is falling sharply, as
underlying consumption and transactions have seen an exponential dip. While central
banks around the world slash interest rates, banks are reducing yields to generate business,
thus significantly reducing net interest margins. Income from payments and other fee-
based services are hit by a general decline in economic activity. With measures like
moratorium periods provided on loans, banks’ cashflow have also taken a hit. We expect an
overall drop of up to 10% in banks’ payments revenues, which means a USD 150 billion top-
line decline for the industry globally, as demand in sectors like retail and entertainment
falls sharply or moves to online channels, while activity in areas such as tourism and travel
evaporates. There is little that banks can to do to stop the overall drop in revenue, but they
can focus on making payments safer by increasing limits on contactless payment channels
and educating consumers on digital wallets. Banks can also focus on cashback and loyalty
rewards to encourage spending in sectors that need it the most.
• Operating Model Adjustments, Cost Elasticity and Innovation: Over the next few quarters,
the banking sector will face a misalignment between short-term costs and revenues due to
the economic impact of COVID-19. Banks would need to review and prioritize current
projects to ensure allocation of resources to the most pressing needs. Banks should also
focus on investing in areas that will outlive the current pandemic, including projects and
initiatives that maintain or improve the customer experience such as a paperless utility,
end-to-end digital advisory and lending capabilities, increased fraud and cybersecurity
analysis and detection, etc. These new digital tools will make banks more efficient and
resilient to future changes. Banks that haven’t focused on remote working and virtual
collaboration in the past should explore establishing elastic operations. This will insure
banks against such unprecedented lockdowns and perhaps better manage cost overheads.
14. Solutions For Recovery
• A lot has been done already by banks towards taking measures to safeguard itself from
covid. In the new normal situation, banks have focused on maintaining critical staff at
branches and have temporarily redeployed staff to manage online or phone enquiries from
customers. They’ve also deployed mobile ATMs and implemented doorstep banking for
senior citizens and other customers that need additional attention.
• They are associating with financial firms to implement video collaboration tools, new chat
and messaging software and other fintech innovations to continue live interactions with
customers who have been coping with social distancing norms, with some already making
use of common consumer apps to that end.
• Several banks have made investments in technology and digital transformation over the past
couple of years. A lot of them, however, are still heavily reliant on face-to-face interactions,
supported by paper processes. So, it is expected to see renewed vigor in the Indian financial
services industry with banks making a concerted effort to up their digital game. This will be
critical as COVID-19 is likely to have a prolonged impact, and banking touches every part of
our economy .
• That being said, most banks have addressed the immediate challenges of COVID-19, as
mentioned earlier, related to protecting staff and providing much needed services to
customers. They now have the chance to be active participants to help mitigate this crisis.
15. Conclusion
• COVID-19 will have long-lasting impact on many industries including banks. Post
crisis, digital maturity and COVID-19 resiliency will determine strategy of
banking players with three segments emerging: banks that are already future-
ready with truly digital banking capabilities and cost elasticity, banks that are
digital laggards and that need to evolve and renew due to sub-par COVID-19
resiliency, and lastly banks that will struggle to survive as a result of being digital
laggards with sub-par financial and operational resiliency.
• COVID-19 will change our behaviors as customers, citizens and employees in
India and around the world. As people become more focused on their well-
being, businesses will also need to understand how they can be part of a new
health ecosystem that is likely to dominate customer thinking going forward.
The idea that “every business is a health business” is already emerging in many
corners of financial services, and that is perhaps one of the few positive lasting
impacts to result from COVID-19.